India market attack: Suspected rebels kill 13 in Assam

Gunmen have opened fire on a busy market place in India's north-eastern state of Assam, killing at least 13 people, officials say.

Police blamed the attacks on suspected rebels from a faction of the National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB).

Reports say one suspected rebel was killed in the gun battle with security forces in Kokrajhar district.

The NDFB wants an independent homeland for the Bodo ethnic group to be carved out of Assam.

Assam police chief Mukesh Sahay told the BBC that the attack took place in a market in Balajan, an area just outside the town of Kokrajhar.

"Many civilians sustained injuries when militants opened indiscriminate fire. They also lobbed grenades," he said.

One gunman was killed by the security forces and troops were pursuing five others who had fled. Several homes and shops were damaged in the attack.

In 2014, NDFB rebels killed at least 62 people in Sonitpur and Kokrajhar.

The Bodos now have an autonomous territorial council which one of their parties, the Bodoland People's Front (BPF), controls. The council offers considerable local autonomy to more than 3,000 villages that are home to Bodo tribesmen.

A number of rebel groups in Assam have been fighting the authorities, demanding autonomy or independent homelands for the indigenous groups they represent.

At least 12 people have been killed and seven injured after an aging residential building collapsed early Tuesday in Thane district of the western Indian state of Maharashtra. About 17 people are feared trapped under the rubble.